Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists
Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists | |
---|---|
President | Jan Zahradil (CZ) |
Secretary-General | Daniel Hannan (UK) |
Founded | 1 October 2009 |
Preceded by | Movement for European Reform[1] |
Headquarters | Rue d'Arlon 40, 1000 Brussels, Belgium[2] |
Youth wing | European Young Conservatives |
Ideology |
Conservatism Euroscepticism Economic liberalism[3] |
Political position | Centre-right to Right-wing |
International affiliation | International Democrat Union |
European Parliament group | European Conservatives and Reformists |
Colours | Blue and white |
Political foundation | New Direction |
Website | |
www | |
The Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists (AECR) is a conservative and eurosceptic[4] European political party, defending broader conservative and economically liberal principles.[3] It has twenty-two member parties, as well as four independent members, spread across twenty countries. Its member parties have fifty MEPs and one European Commissioner. It has two heads of state and its members form part of two further governments in the European Council. Its wider non-EU membership also includes a further 3 parties in government. It has political groups in the European Parliament, the Committee of the Regions and the Congress and Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.
The party was founded on 1 October 2009,[5] after the creation of the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) political group in the European Parliament. It was officially recognised by the European Parliament in January 2010. The AECR had eight members at its formation—predominantly in central and eastern Europe. It has accepted twelve more member parties since then, representing the eurosceptic centre-right.
The AECR is led by a board of directors who are elected by the Council, which represents all AECR member parties.[6] The AECR's president is Jan Zahradil MEP, and its secretary-general is Daniel Hannan MEP. The Vice-Presidents are MP Guðlaugur Þór Þórðarson, from Iceland, MEP Anna Fotyga from Poland, MP Geoffrey Clifton-Brown from the United Kingdom and Zafer Sirakaya from the AK Party in Turkey.
The party is affiliated with the European Conservatives and Reformists group in the European Parliament, the pan-European think tank New Direction, and the youth organisation the European Young Conservatives. It is also formally associated with the European Conservatives and Reformists group in the Committee of the Regions, the European Conservatives Group in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and the European Conservatives and Reformists group in the Congress of the Council of Europe.
History
The Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists was founded on 1 October 2009,[7] after the ECR political group was founded in the wake of the 2009 European Parliament election, and was officially recognised by the European Parliament in January 2010.
The AECR was formally constituted under the chairmanship of Belgian MEP Derk Jan Eppink, but this position was later transferred to Czech MEP Jan Zahradil. At the AECR's first congress in Warsaw on 8 June 2010, it was joined by Luxembourg's Alternative Democratic Reform Party. The congress was attended by UK Conservative Party Chairman Sayeeda Warsi and former Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek. On 25 March 2011, the Civic Conservative Party from Slovakia joined the AECR. The Icelandic Independence Party joined the AECR in November 2011, the party's first member from outside the European Union. They were followed by Georgia's Christian-Democratic Movement in August 2012. Italy's Conservatives and Social Reformers joined the AECR in October 2012: giving the AECR its first representation in one of the four largest continental European countries. The Conservative Party of Canada became the AECR's first associate member (later renamed 'regional partners') in November 2012.
In November 2013, Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party, the Faroe Islands' People's Party, and Romania's New Republic joined. In July 2014, Prosperous Armenia, Armenia's second largest political party, joined.[8] The Conservative Party of Georgia and New Majority joined on 1 November 2014. At the same time, the AECR formally affiliated to the European Conservatives Group in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.[9] The Liberal Party of Australia, Istiqlal Party of Morocco, National Party of New Zealand, and Republican Party of the United States joined as further regional partners in 2014.
On 12 November 2015, the Conservatives and Reformists of Italy were admitted as AERC members.[10] On 18 March 2016, the Alliance for Progress and Renewal (ALFA) of Germany and M10 party of Romania joined the AECR.[11]
Conservatives and Reformists Summit
- 2015 Conservatives and Reformists Summit: Tunis (Tunisia) [12]
- 2016 Conservatives and Reformists Summit: Antalya (Turkey) [13]
Principles
The AECR adopted the Reykjavík Declaration at its Council Meeting on 21 March 2014. The declaration defines the principles that underpin the AECR. It replaces the Prague Declaration—adopted by the ECR in 2009.
The Reykjavík Declaration
- The Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists (AECR) brings together parties committed to individual liberty, national sovereignty, parliamentary democracy, the rule of law, private property, low taxes, sound money, free trade, open competition, and the devolution of power.
- AECR believes in a Europe of independent nations, working together for mutual gain while each retaining its identity and integrity.
- AECR is committed to the equality of all European democracies, whatever their size, and regardless of which international associations they join.
- AECR favours the exercise of power at the lowest practicable level—by the individual where possible, by local or national authorities in preference to supranational bodies.
- AECR understands that open societies rest upon the dignity and autonomy of the individual, who should be as free as possible from state coercion. The liberty of the individual includes freedom of religion and worship, freedom of speech and expression, freedom of movement and association, freedom of contract and employment, and freedom from oppressive, arbitrary or punitive taxation.
- AECR recognises the equality of all citizens before the law, regardless of ethnicity, sex or social class. It rejects all forms of extremism, authoritarianism and racism.
- AECR cherishes the important role of civil associations, families and other bodies that fill the space between the individual and the government.
- AECR acknowledges the unique democratic legitimacy of the nation-state.
- AECR is committed to the spread of free commerce and open competition, in Europe and globally.
- AECR supports the principles of the Prague Declaration of March 2009 and the work of the European Conservatives and Reformists in the European Parliament and allied groups on the other European assemblies.
Member parties
Country | Political party | MEPs | National MPs | Joined |
---|---|---|---|---|
Armenia | Prosperous Armenia | Not in the EU | 36 / 131 |
3 July 2014 |
Azerbaijan | Azerbaijani Popular Front Party | Not in the EU | 1 / 125 |
15 November 2015 |
Bulgaria | Independent MEPs | 2 / 17 |
N/A | 2014 |
Croatia | Croatian Conservative Party | 1 / 11 |
0 / 151 |
22 May 2015 |
Czech Republic | Civic Democratic Party | 2 / 21 |
16 / 200 |
1 October 2009 |
Faroe Islands | People's Party | Not in the EU | 6 / 33 |
8 November 2013 |
Finland | Finns Party | 2 / 13 |
38 / 200 |
15 November 2015 |
Georgia | Christian-Democratic Movement | Not in the EU | 0 / 150 |
16 August 2012 |
Georgia | Conservative Party | Not in the EU | 6 / 150 |
1 November 2014 |
Germany | Alliance for Progress and Renewal | 5 / 99 |
0 / 631 |
18 March 2016 |
Iceland | Independence Party | Not in the EU | 19 / 63 |
12 November 2011 |
Italy | Conservatives and Reformists | 2 / 73 |
9 / 630 |
13 November 2015[10] |
Latvia | National Alliance | 1 / 8 |
17 / 100 |
2014 |
Lithuania | Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania | 1 / 11 |
8 / 141 |
22 June 2009 |
Luxembourg | Alternative Democratic Reform Party | 0 / 6 |
3 / 60 |
8 June 2010 |
Montenegro | Movement for Changes | Not in the EU | 5 / 81 |
22 May 2015 |
Poland | Law and Justice | 18 / 51 |
235 / 460 |
22 June 2009 |
Romania | M10 | 1 / 32 |
0 / 588 |
18 March 2016 |
Romania | New Republic | 0 / 32 |
1 / 588 |
8 November 2013 |
Slovakia | Civic Conservative Party | 0 / 13 |
1 / 150 |
25 March 2011 |
Slovakia | Freedom and Solidarity | 1 / 13 |
20 / 150 |
13 November 2015 |
Slovakia | New Majority | 1 / 13 |
2 / 150 |
1 November 2014 |
Turkey | Justice and Development Party | Not in the EU | 317 / 550 |
8 November 2013 |
United Kingdom | Conservative Party | 20 / 73 |
331 / 650 |
1 October 2009 |
United Kingdom | Ulster Unionist Party | 1 / 73 |
2 / 650 |
1 October 2009 |
Former members
- Belgium: Libertarian, Direct, Democratic (2010–2014)
- Denmark: Anna Rosbach (individual member; 2012–14)
- Hungary: Hungarian Democratic Forum (2009–11), Lajos Bokros (individual member; 2013–14)
- Italy: Susy De Martini (individual member; 2013–14), Conservatives and Social Reformers (2012–14)
- Latvia: For Fatherland and Freedom/LNNK (2009–11; merged in 2011 into National Alliance, which became a member in 2014)
- Poland: Poland Comes First (2010–14), Adam Bielan (independent member; 2011–14), Michał Kamiński (independent member; 2012–14)
Regional partners
The AECR also has five regional partners, formerly called 'associate members', from outside Europe.
Country | Political party | National MPs | Joined |
---|---|---|---|
Australia | Liberal Party of Australia | 81 / 150 |
2014 |
Canada | Conservative Party of Canada | 99 / 308 |
1 November 2012 |
Morocco | Istiqlal Party | 60 / 395 |
2014 |
New Zealand | New Zealand National Party | 59 / 121 |
2014 |
United States | Republican Party | 299 / 535 |
2014 |
Elected representatives of member parties
European institutions
Organisation | Institution | Number of seats |
---|---|---|
European Union | European Commission | 1 / 28 |
European Union | European Council (Heads of Government) |
2 / 28 |
European Union | Council of the EU (Participation in Government) |
4 / 28 |
European Union | European Parliament | 50 / 751 |
Council of Europe | Parliamentary Assembly | 22 / 321 |
AECR groupings
The AECR is formally affiliated to groupings in the European Parliament and the Committee of the Regions of the European Union, the Congress of the Council of Europe and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and the NATO Parliamentary Assembly.
European Parliament
The ECR group is the third-largest group in the European Parliament. Founded in 2009, before the AECR was launched, the ECR brings together 75 MEPs from 16 countries. The ECR group is led by Syed Kamall of the British Conservative Party.
- ↑ Rikke Karlsson left the DF.
- ↑ Bernd Lucke left AfD with 4 more MEPs after losing leadership of his party in 2015. The remaining two AfD members, Beatrix von Storch and Marcus Pretzell were expelled from the ECR group in 2016.
- ↑ Notis Marias left ANEL.
- ↑ Brian Crowley was the sole member of Fianna Fáil elected in the 2014 election; following his announcement that he was joining the ECR, Fianna Fáil withdrew the party whip. Crowley remains a member of the Fianna Fáil party as a whole, but has been excluded from its cross-Parliamentary caucus.
Committee of the Regions
Following the creation of the ECR Group in the European Parliament in 2009, and the creation of the AECR in 2010, the ECR Group in the Committee of the Regions was formed on 10 April 2013 under the leadership of Gordon Keymer CBE and with the support of the AECR. The Group was officially announced during the 11–12 April 100th Committee of the Regions plenary session.
The ECR Group was the first Group to be formed in the Committee of the Regions during the course of a mandate and was the first ECR Group to be formed outside of the European Parliament.
The President of the Group is Cllr. Gordon Keymer CBE (Leader of Tandridge District Council) and the Vice Presidents are Dan Jiránek (Mayor of Kladno) and Daiva Matonienė (Deputy Mayor of Šiauliai City Council). Adam Banaszak (Member of the Kujawsko-Pomorskie regional assembly), Cllr. Kay Twitchen OBE (Member of Essex County Council) and Cllr. Judith Pearce (Deputy Leader of Wychavon District Council and Executive Board Member for Planning, Infrastructure and Housing).
Country | Party name | Members | Other affiliations | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Full | Affiliate | Europarty | EU Parliament | International | ||
Czech Republic | Civic Democratic Party | 3 | 1 | AECR | ECR | IDU |
Denmark | Danish People's Party | 0 | 2 | MELD | ECR | None |
Finland | Finns Party | 1 | 1 | AECR | ECR | None |
Lithuania | Independent | 1 | 3 | None | None | None |
Netherlands | Christen Unie | 1 | 1 | ECPM | ECR | None |
Poland | Law and Justice | 1 | 4 | AECR | ECR | None |
Slovakia | Independent | 1 | 0 | None | None | None |
United Kingdom | Conservative Party | 7 | 8 | AECR | ECR | IDU |
United Kingdom | Ulster Unionist Party | 0 | 1 | AECR | ECR | IDU |
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
The European Conservatives Group in the European Parliament, founded in 1970 and existing for most of its history as the 'European Democrat Group' became officially affiliated to the AECR on 29 September 2014. The EC group is led by Samad Seyidov MP, of the New Azerbaijan Party.
As of 23 October 2014, the European Conservatives have the following members:[14]
Country | Party name | Members | Other affiliations | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Europarty | EU Parliament | International | |||||
Armenia | Prosperous Armenia | 2 | AECR | N/A | None | ||
Armenia | Republican Party of Armenia [A] | 1 | None | N/A | None | ||
Azerbaijan | New Azerbaijan Party | 4 | None | N/A | None | ||
Azerbaijan | Independent | 1 | None | N/A | None | ||
Czech Republic | Civic Democratic Party | 2 | AECR | ECR | IDU | ||
Denmark | Danish People's Party | 1 | None | ECR | None | ||
Greece | Independent Greeks | 1 | None | ECR | None | ||
Iceland | Independence Party | 2 | AECR | N/A | IDU | ||
Norway | Progress Party | 2 | None | N/A | None | ||
Poland | Law and Justice | 7 | AECR | ECR | None | ||
Poland | United Poland | 1 | MELD | No MEPs | None | ||
Turkey | Justice and Development Party [B] | 13 | AECR | N/A | None | ||
Turkey | Nationalist Movement Party[C] | 1 | None | N/A | None | ||
Ukraine | Party of Regions [D] | 4 | None | N/A | None | ||
Ukraine | Sovereign European Ukraine | 1 | None | N/A | None | ||
Ukraine | Independent | 1 | None | N/A | None | ||
United Kingdom | Conservative Party | 17 | AECR | ECR | IDU | ||
United Kingdom | Democratic Unionist Party | 1 | None | Non-Inscrits | None | ||
^A One of the three members of the Republican Party of Armenia sit with the EC Group. The other two members sit with the European People's Party. ^B Eleven of the thirteen members of the Justice and Development Party sit with the EC Group. One sits with the European People's Party and one sits with the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe. ^C One of the two members of the Nationalist Movement Party sits with the EC Group. The other member sits with the Socialist Group. ^D Four of the seven members of Party of Regions sit with the EC Group. Two sit with the Socialist Group and one sits with the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe. |
Congress of the Council of Europe
The ECR group in the Congress of the Council of Europe brings together representatives in local government from across Europe. It has 31 members, 26 of whom represent parties in the AECR. The ECR group is led by Halldór Halldórsson of the Icelandic Independence Party.
Country | Party name | Members | Other affiliations | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Europarty | EU Parliament | International | |||
Armenia | Prosperous Armenia | 1 | AECR | N/A | None |
Czech Republic | Civic Democratic Party | 3 | AECR | ECR | IDU |
Czech Republic | Independent | 2 | None | N/A | None |
Denmark | Danish People's Party | 1 | None | ECR | None |
Iceland | Independence Party | 2 | AECR | N/A | IDU |
Norway | Progress Party | 2 | None | N/A | None |
Poland | Law and Justice | 1 | AECR | ECR | None |
Poland | Independent | 1 | None | N/A | None |
Turkey | Nationalist Movement Party | 5 | None | N/A | None |
Ukraine | People's Party | 1 | None | N/A | None |
United Kingdom | Conservative Party | 11 | AECR | ECR | IDU |
United Kingdom | Ulster Unionist Party | 1 | AECR | ECR | None |
Youth organisation
European Young Conservatives
The European Young Conservatives (EYC) is the AECR's youth wing. It brings together conservative and centre-right political parties from across Europe. As of 2015, the group has a membership of 23 political youth organisations from 22 different countries and territories. Its patron was Margaret Thatcher until her death in 2013. The current chairperson of EYC is Keti Mumalashvili from the Georgian Young Conservatives.
Conservatives and Reformists Initiative
The Conservatives and Reformists Initiative (CRI) is a flagship project of the AECR, and its partner New Direction – the Foundation for European Reform that was launched in Tunis, Tunisia on 14 November 2015 and covered extensively on the Al Jazeera news network.
The CRI aims to strengthen the moderate Centre-Right in emerging democracies in North Africa and the Middle East. It runs practical programmes designed to strengthen the organisational capacity of each political party, support party campaign and communications operations, assist with policy development create regional support for like-minded political parties and support elected representatives at all levels, particularly in communications with constituents and the media.
See also
Conservatism portal
Notes
References
- ↑ "William Hague gives a reply (if not an answer) to the question: "What does 'We will not let matters rest there' actually mean in practice?"". ConservativeHome. 2 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-24. (Dead Link)
- ↑ "Contacts". Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists. 2011. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
- 1 2 Rendall, Alasdair (26 March 2014). "The European political parties". BBC News.
- ↑ John McCormick (2015). European Union Politics. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 247. ISBN 978-1-137-45340-2.
- ↑ "ECR Trans-National Party Set for EU Funding – But is it legal?". New Europe. 18 January 2010. Archived from the original on 7 May 2010. Retrieved 10 May 2010.
- ↑ "Organisation". Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists. 2011. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
- ↑ Nordsieck, Wolfram. "News 2009". Parties and Elections in Europe. Retrieved 10 May 2010.
- ↑ "Prosperous Armenia joins AECR". Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
- ↑ "AECR welcomes two new members from Slovakia and Georgia". Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists. 1 November 2014. Retrieved 2 November 2014.
- 1 2 "Fitto: Conservatori e Riformisti entrano ufficialmente nell’Aecr, l’alleanza dei partiti e movimenti conservatori europei" [Lease: ECR officially entered in ecr, the alliance of European conservative parties and movements]. conservatorieriformisti.it (in Italian). 13 November 2015.
- ↑ "AECR welcomes M10 and ALFA as new members". aecr.eu. 18 March 2016.
- ↑ AECR President Jan Zahradil opens Tunis Summit, AECR News, November 13, 2015
- ↑ Conservatives and Reformists Summit Antalya, AECR News, changeandwin.org, March 2016
- ↑ "European Conservatives Group". Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. 23 October 2014.
External links
- Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists Official website
|
|
|